Islets of Langerhans
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A porcine islet of Langerhans. The left image is a brightfield image created using hematoxylin stain; nuclei are dark circles and the acinar pancreatic tissue is darker than the islet tissue. The right image is the same section stained by immunofluorescence against insulin, indicating beta cells.
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The islets of Langerhans are the regions of the pancreas that contain its endocrine (i.e., hormone-producing) cells. Discovered in 1869 by German pathological anatomist Paul Langerhans, the islets of Langerhans constitute approximately 1 to 2% of the mass of the pancreas. There are about one million islets in a healthy adult human pancreas, which are distributed throughout the organ; their combined mass is 1 to 1.5 grams.
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[edit] Cell types
Hormones produced in the islets of Langerhans are secreted directly into the blood flow by (at least) five different types of cells. In rat islets, endocrine cell subsets are distributed as follows:[1]
- Alpha cells producing glucagon (15-20% of total islet cells)
- Beta cells producing insulin and amylin (65-80%)
- Delta cells producing somatostatin (3-10%)
- PP cells producing pancreatic polypeptide (3-5%)
- Epsilon cells producing ghrelin (<1%)
It has been recognized that the cytoarchitecture of pancreatic differs between species.[2][3][4] In particular, while rodent islets are characterized by a predominant proportion of insulin-producing beta cells in the core of the cluster and by scarse alpha, delta and PP cells in the periphery, human islets display alpha and beta cells in close relationship with each other throughout the cluster.[2][4]
Islets can influence each other through paracrine and autocrine communication, and beta cells are coupled electrically to other beta cells (but not to other cell types).
[edit] Paracrine feedback
The paracrine feedback system of the islets of Langerhans has the following structure:[5]
- Insulin: secreted by beta cells and inhibits alpha cells; moves glucose into the cells and activates glycogen formation
- Glucagon: secreted alpha which inhibits beta cells and delta cells; causes glycogen to be broken down into glucose in the liver
- Somatostatin: inhibits alpha cells and beta cells
[edit] Electrical activity
Electrical activity of pancreatic islets has been studied using patch clamp techniques, and it has turned out that the behavior of cells in intact islets differs significantly from the behavior of dispersed cells.[6]
[edit] As a treatment for type 1 diabetes
Because the beta cells in the islets of Langerhans are selectively destroyed by an autoimmune process in type 1 diabetes, clinicians and researchers are actively pursuing islet transplantation as a means of restoring physiological beta cell function in patients with type 1 diabetes.[7][8]
Recent clinical trials have shown that insulin independence and improved metabolic control can be reproducibly obtained after transplantation of cadaveric donor islets into patients with unstable type 1 diabetes.[8]
Islet transplantation for type 1 diabetes currently requires potent immunosuppression to prevent host rejection of donor islets.[9] Rachel Harris, islet cell recipient, was transplanted at the Diabetes Research Institute in Miami, Florida. In February 2004, Rachel became the world's longest surviving insulin-free diabetic according to the Miami Herald.[10]
An alternative source of beta cells, such an islets derived from adult stem cells or progenitor cells of a diabetic would contribute overcoming the current shortage of donor organs for transplantation. The field of regenerative medicine is rapidly evolving, and offers great hope for the nearest future. However, type 1 diabetes is the result of the autoimmune destruction of beta cells in the pancreas. Therefore, an effective cure will require a sequential, integrated approach that combines adequate and safe immune interventions with beta cell regenerative approaches.[11]
[edit] Transplantation
Islet cell transplantation has the possibility of restoring beta cells and curing diabetes, offering an alternative to a complete pancreas transplantation or an artificial pancreas.
The Chicago Project headed at University of Illinois at Chicago Medical Center is investigating ways to regenerate beta cells in vivo. With that being said, beta cells experience apoptosis early and thus are destroyed within a normal-functioning pancreas. The source of this seems to come from the transfer of Pander (FAM3B), a gene that works by attaching to RNA.[12] Pander, when active, causes the beta cells to be blocked at S phase, which induces apoptosis. This loss of beta cell mass eventually leads to a loss of most of the transplanted beta cells.
[edit] Gallery
- Hormones/islet architecture
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Elayat AA, el-Naggar MM, Tahir M (1995). "An immunocytochemical and morphometric study of the rat pancreatic islets". Journal of Anatomy 186 (Pt 3): 629–37. PMID 7559135.
- ^ a b Brissova M, Fowler MJ, Nicholson WE, Chu A, Hirshberg B, Harlan DM, Powers AC (2005). "Assessment of human pancreatic islet architecture and composition by laser scanning confocal microscopy". Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry 53 (9): 1087-97. PMID 15923354.
- ^ Ichii H, Inverardi L, Pileggi A, Molano RD, Cabrera O, Caicedo A, Messinger S, Kuroda Y, Berggren PO, Ricordi C (2005). "A novel method for the assessment of cellular composition and beta-cell viability in human islet preparations". American Journal of Transplantation 5 (7): 1635-45. PMID 15943621.
- ^ a b Cabrera O, Berman DM, Kenyon NS, Ricordi C, Berggren PO, Caicedo A (2006). "The unique cytoarchitecture of human pancreatic islets has implications for islet cell function". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 (7): 2334-9. ISSN 1091-6490. PMID 16461897.
- ^ Wang, Michael B.; Bullock, John; Boyle, Joseph R. (2001). Physiology. Hagerstown, MD: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. [page needed]. ISBN 0-683-30603-0.
- ^ Pérez-Armendariz M, Roy C, Spray DC, Bennett MV (1991). "Biophysical properties of gap junctions between freshly dispersed pairs of mouse pancreatic beta cells". Biophysical Journal 59 (1): 76–92. PMID 2015391.
- ^ Meloche RM (2007). "Transplantation for the treatment of type 1 diabetes". World Journal of Gastroenterology 13 (47): 6347–55. doi:. PMID 18081223.
- ^ a b Hogan A, Pileggi A, Ricordi C (2008). "Transplantation: current developments and future directions; the future of clinical islet transplantation as a cure for diabetes". Frontiers of Bioscience 13: 1192-205. PMID 17981623.
- ^ Chatenoud L (2008). "Chemical immunosuppression in islet transplantation--friend or foe?". New England Journal of Medicine 358 (11): 1192–3. doi:. ISSN 0028-4793. PMID 18337609.
- ^ "Diabetics - cell transplant gives new future". Miami Herald (MedicalNewsToday.com (republisher)). February 13, 2004. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/5893.php. Retrieved on 2009-04-21.
- ^ Pileggi A, Cobianchi L, Inverardi L, Ricordi C (2006). "Overcoming the challenges now limiting islet transplantation: a sequential, integrated approach". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1079: 383-98. ISSN 0077-8923. PMID 17130583.
- ^ Cao X, Gao Z, Robert CE, et al. (2003). "Pancreatic-derived factor (FAM3B), a novel islet cytokine, induces apoptosis of insulin-secreting beta-cells". Diabetes 52 (9): 2296–303. doi:. PMID 12941769.
[edit] External links
- MeSH A03.734.414
- "Pancreas, human - H&E", Blue Histology - Accessory Digestive Glands, School of Anatomy and Human Biology, The University of Western Australia
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